Madeline Bell takes the time to stop the clock!
Tonight at 7pm Easter, 4 Pacific tune in here!
Featuring Della Reese, Steampacket, Linda Jones, Mary Wells, January Tyme and many more
Featuring Della Reese, Steampacket, Linda Jones, Mary Wells, January Tyme and many more
Posted by GirlGroupGirl at 8:16 AM 0 comments
Posted by Nitty Gritty Tania at 11:55 PM 0 comments
Posted by GirlGroupGirl at 1:43 PM 0 comments
Posted by Debbie D at 10:32 AM 0 comments
Labels: Debbie D, DJ Roulette, Gaylord Fields, Gruesomes
"The first monster musical!" claimed the ads. At a Long Beach amusement park, Madame Estrella, the gypsy fortuneteller, hypnotizes patrons, throws acid in their faces, and collects the now ugly monsters in her basement. Ortega the hunchback and Carmelita the stripper help. Hero Cash Flagg (the director) visits the gypsy and is turned into a zombie in a hooded sweatshirt! The monsters break loose during an incredible dance number and kill everyone in sight until the police arrive. Hear "The Mixed Up Zombie Stomp"! See the "1001 weirdest scenes ever!" "Not for sissies!" When the film was reissued, actors wearing the same horror masks used in the movie "crashed out of the screen to invade the audience and abduct girls from their seats!" At least that's how the ads described it. Filmed in Bloody Vision. Look for this unbelievably well-photographed oddity with Carolyn Brandt (the director's wife), Atlas King, and a hypnotic umbrella! Vilmos Zigmond was the cinematographer.
Posted by Ted Cogswell at 10:41 AM 1 comments
Labels: 1964, psychotronic movies, Ray Dennis Steckler
Posted by Dangerous Curves at 2:48 PM 0 comments
Posted by Vikki Vaden at 7:21 PM 0 comments
"Amazing but true - the same year that The Brain That Wouldn't Die was produced, some Germans were making this similar decapitation epic. Michel Simon (a famous French actor who had seen better days) has invented serum Z. He uses it to keep a dog's head alive. His new co-worker, Dr. Ood (Horst Frank), cuts off Simon's chubby head and keeps it alive with the serum. Not wanting to be upstaged by the American counterpart, the director also has Ood put the pretty head of a crippled nurse on the perfect body of a stripper. The nurse/stripper falls in love with the stripper's boyfriend, who recognizes the nurse, but not the body! Incredible, to say the least, and the special effects are pathetic."
Posted by Ted Cogswell at 5:19 PM 0 comments
Labels: 1959, psychotronic movies
Posted by GirlGroupGirl at 4:06 PM 0 comments
Posted by Nitty Gritty Tania at 11:35 AM 0 comments